IN Ross Township Summer 2017 | Page 38

North Hills High School Wind Ensemble Selected for National Honor N orth Hills High School’s Wind Ensemble received a national honor from the National Association for Music Education. The ensemble was chosen from among music ensembles from throughout the United States’ east coast to perform at the 2017 National Association for Music Education All-Eastern Convention in Atlantic City, N.J. North Hills musicians served as a model ensemble for educators, professors, presenters and exhibitors from across the nation who attend the bi-annual conference. Ensembles from the 13 states submitted audition packets that included recordings from their previous year’s performances to their state board. The state boards sent their recommendations to the national selection committee, which selected the ensembles who would perform. “This invitation is one the highest recognitions a concert band can attain in the country. We are excited to see the highest level of achievement continue in the North Hills band program for our students, school and community. We are grateful to all our band directors, teachers, administrators, boosters and community members for their support of our students,” Len Lavelle, North Hills High School music teacher and band director. Their performance included the world premiere of “Metro Dances” by Travis Weller, the program’s 2017 commission. North Hills has commissioned a work each year since 1965, making their series the longest-running band series of its kind in the United States. Through the support of the North Hills Instrumental Parents Association, the series has resulted in the creation of more than 50 works. Works from the series have been recorded by the Tokyo Kosei Wind Orchestra with Frederick Fennel conducting, military bands in Washington, D.C., University of North Texas Wind Symphony and college ensembles throughout the country. They also have been featured in the educational series “Teaching Music Through Performance in Band.” The high school’s wind ensemble consists of 48 musicians in grades 9 to 12 and is under the direction of Len Lavelle and Chris Ballentine. All ensemble members are selected through an audition process. This latest accolade adds to the list of achievements already acquired by North Hills’ talented musicians. In the last seven years, bands from North Hills have performed three times at each the PMEA State Convention and NAfME All-East Convention, all in different years. 36 Ross Township North Hills Students Advance to 2017 PPT Shakespeare Monologue and Scene Contest Finals N orth Hills School District students were named finalists in the 2017 Shakespeare Monologue and Scene Contest sponsored by the Pittsburgh Public Theater. Highcliff Elementary School fifth-grader Samantha Lubbert and North Hills High School junior Michelle Do topped hundreds of fellow competitors in the contest’s preliminary round to advance to the finalist showcase at the O’Reilly Theater. Samantha presented a monologue from “As You Like It” as Rosalind/Ganymede, while Michelle performed a monologue as Antony from “Julius Caesar.” More than 1,000 students participated in the yearly contest that is open to elementary, middle and high school students in grades four to 12. Only a fraction of the students are chosen as finalists. To prepare for the contest, for weeks students rehearsed and memorized their scenes which were required to be under five minutes. To reach the finalist round, the students performed their scenes at the O’Reilly Theater before a panel of distinguished judges and outshone their peers to earn an invitation to perform in front of a different panel of judges.